Koontz v. Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co.

5 Ohio N.P. 15, 7 Ohio Dec. 478, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 10, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 15 (Koontz v. Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koontz v. Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Co., 5 Ohio N.P. 15, 7 Ohio Dec. 478, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

PUGSLEY, J.

This action was tried to the court, a jury being- waived. It was brought by the plaintiffs, who are a firm doing business in New Martinsville, West Va., to recover the value of a car of lumber sold by plaintiffs upon credit, to the. Gashe Lumber Co., of Toledo, and which lumber, it is alleged, that the defendant converted to its own use. The case was submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, the material part of which I. will read:

“On or about the —day of January, 1895, said plaintiffs delivered to the said Ohio Biver Bailroad Company, at New Martinsville, West Virginia, a certain car of lumber, being Ohio Biver Bailroad car, 1443, by said plaintiffs, consigned to The Gashe Lumber Company, Toledo, Ohio, to be transported to said city of Toledo via the defendant’s line of railroad, and there, by said defendant, to be delivered to the Gashe Lumber Co. On or about the 1st day of February, 1895, said car of lumber was duly delivered to, and accepted by the defendant, for transportation to said city of Toledo, and thereupon said defendant- did transport the same to said city, where said car arrived, on or about the 2d day o fFebruary, 1895.
“The said defendant duly notified the said The Gashe Lumber Co., of the arrival of said car of lumber, consigned to it as aforesaid, but from said time continuously up to, and including the 7th day of February, 1895, said car, together with the lumber thereon, remained upon the yard track of said defendant, in said city'of Toledo, for delivery to said The Gashe Lumber Co.
“On or about the 7th day of February, 1895, said The Gashe Lumber Go., was indebted to said defendant, on account of freight on said car 1448, hereinbefore referred to, and was also indebted to said defendant in an amount greater than $293.
' “On or about the 7th day of February, 1895, The Gashe Lumber Co. sold said car of lumber to said defendant, and (the following being- subject to exception by either party as to its competency), there was no consideration for said sale and transfer, other than the payment pro tanto of said pre-existing indebted ness.
“Said lumber was thereupon, by said defendant, used in the manufacture and repair of its cars.
“The plaintiff sold said car of lumber to said The Gashe Lumber Go. on credit, and no part of the purchase price therefor, has ever been paid.
“On the 2d day of February, 1895, said The Gashe Lumber Co., was, and ever since said time, lias been insolvent, and unable to pay its indebtedness.
“On the 21st day of February, 1895.said plaintiffs notified defendant, not to deliversaid lumber to said The Gashe Lumber Co., and requested said defendant, to hold the same subject to their order. They also demanded from said defendant, the possession of said lumber, and, at the same time, tendered the said defendant the sum of $31, the amount due for freight charges on the same; but said defendant refused, and still refuses, to give said plaintiffs the possession thereof.
‘ ‘ Maid lumber was reasonably worth the sum of $293, and the freight charges thereon, were the sum of $31.”

Upon the pleadings and the agreed statement.'of facts, the claim is made by the plaintiffs, that they were entitled to the possession of the lumber in the exercise by them of the right of stoppage in transitu, and upon a refusal to deliver up the lumber as demanded, the defendant is liable as for a conversion. The question, involved in this case, when it was first presented, seemed to be very simple and easy of solution, but after carefully considering the decisions and the reasons upon which they are based, I have experienced some difficulty in arriving at a satisfactory conclusion. No similar case is found in the books; but the general principles underlying- the doctrine of stoppage in transitu, so far as they are applicable, are quite well settled, and it is only by applying- those principles that the rights or the parties here can be determined. .Before considering what I regard as the real questions in the case, T will refer to some of the propositions that were discussed by counsel, but which I think are not involved.

First, the plaintiffs are not in a posi tion to claim that they were entitled to the iiossession of the lumber, on the ground that the sale made by them to the Lumber Co. was voidable for fraud, and that they elected to rescind the sale for that reason. It is true, that in that part, of the reply which is called the second reply, it is alleged that The Gashe Lumber Co. obtained the lumber from the plaintiffs on credit, by falsely and fraudulently representing- that it was solvent, and would be able to pay for the lumber when the credit should expire, and that on the 21st of February, the date of their demand, the plaintiffs elected to rescind the sale and re-take the. lumber. These allegations of the reply cannot be considered, for the reason that thereby, the plaintiffs attempted to set, up a cause of action in the reply which is inconsistent with the cause of action in the petition, which constitutes a departure in pleading-, that is not permissible. (See. 5079, Rev. Stats.) [17]*17And for the further reason that no proof was offered to sustain these allegations. An allegation of new matter in ' the reply is deemed controverted by the defendant as upon a direct denial or avoidance. (Sec. 5081, Rev. Stats.) The agreed statement of facts is silent upon the subject, and therefore the right of the plaintiffs to rescind the sale made by them to The Gashe Lumber Co., and to recover the property on the ground of fraud, is not involved in the case. If the plaintiffs had made these allegations in their petition, and they were either admitted or proved, then there would be no apparent difficulty in disposing of the question at issue. In that event, the case of Eaton v. Davidson, 46 Ohio St., 355, would be applicable, wherein it was held that “where a purchaser fraudulently obtains goods from the owner, and transfers them to another in payment of a pre-existing debt, such preexisting debt alone, will not be a sufficient consideration to constitute the transferee a bona fide purchaser for value, as against the owner from whom the goods were thus obtained by fraud. ’, There being no proof in this ease that the lumber was fraudulently obtained by The Gashe Lumber Co., the only right which the plaintiffs had, if any, was the right of stoppage in transitu,'which is the right of the vendor, upon the insolvency of the vendee, to resume posses sion of the goods while they are in transitu. And the prevailing opinion now is, that the exercise of this right does not rescind the sale, but simply restores the vendor to his lien on the goods for the purchase price. I will say, however, that the reasoning of the court in the Eaton ease, already cited, has some bearing upon the question to be hereafter considered, viz: whether, as against the right of the vendor to stop the goods in transitu, a pre-existing debt is a 'sufficient consideration to constitute the purchaser from the vendee a bona fide purchaser for value.

In the next place, it is alleged in the reply, that a receiver of the Gashe Lumber Co. was appointed upon February 9th, 1895, and that the alleged sale by the Lumber Go. to the defendant, did not occur until after that date. The agreed statement of facts is silent as to when, if at all, a receiver was appointed, but it is agreed therein, that the sale by .the Lumber Co.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 15, 7 Ohio Dec. 478, 1897 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koontz-v-wheeling-lake-erie-railway-co-ohctcompllucas-1897.